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After discovering the existence of a licensed radio station in Loretto, Tennessee, that already uses the WKSR-FM call sign, WKSR was preemptively renamed "Black Squirrel Radio" as the Fall 2005 semester began, a nod to black squirrels common around Kent, Ohio, and the campus proper; [23] faculty advisor Marianne Warzinski viewed the rebranding ...
WKSR (1420 kHz) is an AM radio station broadcasting a classic hits format. Licensed to Pulaski, Tennessee , United States, the station is currently owned by Roger Wright through licensee Radio 7 Media, LLC, and features programming from Westwood One .
Jack Alicoate, ed. (1939), "Tennessee", Radio Annual, New York: Radio Daily, OCLC 2459636 – via Internet Archive "AM Stations in the U.S.: Tennessee", Radio Annual Television Year Book, New York: Radio Television Daily, 1963, OCLC 10512375 – via Internet Archive
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WKSR (AM), a radio station (1420 AM) licensed to serve Pulaski, Tennessee, United States; WLFM (FM), a radio station (103.9 FM) licensed to serve Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, which held the call sign WKSR-FM from 2014 to 2016; WLXA, a radio station (98.3 FM) licensed to serve Loretto, Tennessee, which held the call sign WKSR-FM from 1995 to 2014
The other station was also a daytimer; WKSR went on the air in 1947, on 730 AM in Pulaski, Tennessee, a town about 30 miles north of Athens. [5] It was owned by the Pulaski Broadcasting Company and was a Mutual Broadcasting System network affiliate .
From September 2016 until July 2019, Jones also hosted "Hey Kentucky!", a nightly sports and news recap program on WLEX-TV in Lexington, since also syndicated to WBNA in Louisville. [8] On "Hey Kentucky!", Jones was joined, nightly, by rotating co-hosts, with some overlap with the KSR radio show.
It was renamed the Tennessee Oilers Radio Network in 1997 during the team's first season in Tennessee. The headquarters were now located in Nashville, but their home games were played in the Liberty Bowl in Memphis in 1997 and the Vanderbilt University's Stadium in 1998 and at least until their new stadium, the Adelphia Coliseum (now Nissan Stadium) was completed in August 1999.